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Monday, December 08, 2014

2014 A Year Of 'Unspeakable Brutality' For Children In Conflict Zones

Staggering statistics of violence against children worldwide. So shameful.

It is sadly ironic that in this, the 25th anniversary year of the
Convention on the Rights of the Child when we have been able to
celebrate so much progress for children globally, the rights of so many
millions of other children have been so brutally violated,” said Lake.
“Violence and trauma do more than harm individual children – they
undermine the strength of societies. The world can and must do more to
make 2015 a much better year for every child. For every child who grows
up strong, safe, healthy and educated is a child who can go on to
contribute to her own, her family’s, her community’s, her nation’s and,
indeed, to our common future.”

Amen.

Here is a fact sheet that provides added perspective. We must end all wars and we must save and protect our children—all children.

-Angela

A Syrian Kurdish child looks through the fence of a refugee
camp in the town of Suruc, Turkey, last month. The advance of Islamic
State jihadists on Kobane has forced some 200,000 refugees to flee
across the border to Turkey.

Aris Messinis/AFP/Getty Images

The United Nations Children's Fund calls 2014 a devastating year
for children, reporting that as many as 15 million young people are
caught in conflicts in the Central African Republic, Iraq, South Sudan,
the Palestinian territories, Syria and Ukraine.

Among the grim statistics in a newly released UNICEF report: There are more than 1.7 million child refugees
from the conflict in Syria, and 105 children have been killed in the
more than 35 attacks on schools in that country. In the Central African
Republic, as many as 10,000 children are believed to have been recruited
by armed groups in the past year, and more than 430 have been killed or
maimed.

A Palestinian girl cries while receiving treatment at a
hospital in the Gaza Strip following shelling in July of a U.N. school
in the Jebaliya refugee camp.

Khalil Hamra/AP

"Children have been killed while studying in the classroom and
while sleeping in their beds," says UNICEF Executive Director Anthony
Lake. "They have been orphaned, kidnapped, tortured, recruited, raped
and even sold as slaves."

South Sudan, a new nation that is in
the midst of a nearly yearlong conflict, has seen almost 750,000
children displaced and several hundred-thousand more forced to flee
across borders. Amid fears of famine in South Sudan, an estimated
235,000 children under the age of 5 are suffering from acute
malnutrition.

The conflict between Israel and the Palestinian
militant group Hamas this summer in Gaza left about 54,000 Palestinian
children homeless and 538 dead.

Aid groups have been stretched
thin by the sheer number of conflicts and the long-simmering ones that
have faded from the headlines. UNICEF says the Ebola outbreak in West
Africa presents yet another threat. Thousands of children have been
orphaned and, according to UNICEF, some 5 million are out of school in
Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

UNICEF says it is responding
where it can, trying to get children back to school in places such as
the Central African Republic and working in Ebola-hit countries to try
to prevent the spread of the disease.

Still, the report makes
for grim reading. It notes that an estimated 230 million children live
in countries where there are armed conflicts, from Iraq to Nigeria.

As Lake puts it, "Never in recent memory have so many children been subjected to such unspeakable brutality."